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Ohio Jewish Chronicle, 1966-03-18

Ohio Jewish Chronicle, 1966-03-18, page 01

Vol. .44, No. 11
nW// Serving Columbus, Dayton/Ceiitraf and Southwestern Ohio \ir'''
! '' ' ii|i ¦ ¦ ¦ III I I
FRIDAY, MARCH 18, 1966 — 26 ADAR. 5726
"'*¦*'"" anil JaWlili Idaki
Javits Sees Danger In Middle East
BY TRVDE B. FELDBIAN
OhronloIe^s
Washington Correspondent.
Senator Jacob K. Javlts (R.N.Y.) delivered a major Sen¬ ate address oh policy In the Middle East and the dangers to world peace which are lurktog there.
He emphasized that Middle East might quickly become the next arena for a major con¬ frontation between the Soviet Union and the United States.
"OEBTAINLV, the tbne has now come to launch a major in¬ temational effort to consolidate the shaky Middle East peace and remove a possible source of ' conflict betvyeen the U. S. and the U. Si S. k. before, not after, an tatemational crisis erupts in this region," he said. "This effort must toclude two prtacipal ele¬ ments, and I strongly recommend their implementation by our Government." i
"An mjderstandtag must be reached with the Soviet Union on the de-escalation of the arms race in the Middle East, an anps race liot only tavolvtag the dis¬ pute between the Arab states and Israel, but also the many disputes among the Arab stated. To this end, I urge the Admtais¬ tration to tavite the Soviet Union to a Conference for the purpose of endtag shipments of arms and materials-of-war .Jtoutba,J4iddli East," he said.
"We must do all we can to promote an understandtag be¬ tween the Arab states and Israel. To this" end, 1 suggest that we use all diplomatic channels open to us to urge the conventag of a conference Of all nations of the Middle East and all other na¬ tions with vital interests ta this region in the quest for peace and to make i>ractical plans for the development of the enthe re- gion/^ J[flvita said.
The World's Weet
Compllad from^ JTA and WUP Reporh
900 BOWLERS TO VISIT COLUMBUS
Local B'nai B'rith bowlers opened the 25th Sectional Tour¬ nament at Piketon Lanes, rolling their singles, doubles and team events at Aiiios Lanes. Other sec¬ tionals are being held in, .Kansas - City, Los Angelas, Milwaukee, Rochester and Toledo.
This anhual event has grown over the years to the extent that 9dO bowlers arie expected to par¬ ticipate ta the Columbus touma' ment this weekend.
AWABDS WILL BE made for scratch and handicap scores, high gaitie and three-gamie seriw, and high ta all events. Ih addition a si«cial prize fund of $2760 has been set up to be awarded to bowlers ta addition tp sectional wtaners.
The special prize fund will be awarded to the highest team event score in all six sectionsi and they will be declared nation¬ al champions.
BOWUNO will begta prompt¬ ly at 6 pjTt on Saturday and at 10 a.m. on Sunday at Berwick,
(coiillnusd en page 41
TEL AVIV, (JTA) — Soviet Ambassador Dimltry Chu- vakhin proposed here the formation of a nuclear-free zone In the Middle East. Addressing the Israeli council of the World Jewish Congress, he said that a nuclear-free zone in the Middle East would lessen tensions in the region "and increase the chances for peace talks betwcfen the govern¬ ments of the area."
NEW YORK, (JTA) — A panel of eight distinguished Americans will conduct a public tribunal today at the Car¬ negie International Center to hear aeries of eyewitness reports on the condition of the Jews in the Soviet Union, it was announced here. At an all-day hearing, eight "jurors" will take testimony, receive reports and question witnesses in preparation for the issuance of a comprehensive report later this month. -
TEL AVIV, (JTA) — An American youth, Edward Levi, who ^crossed over into Syria two years ago, near Eln Gev, was returned to Israel in an exchange of prisoners between Israel and Syria. It was the first such exchange in two years
JERUSALEM, (JTA) — President and Mrs. Zalman Shazar left here by air for a week's state visit to Nepal. The President is returning the official visit paid to Israel last fall by King Mahendras. Mr. Shazar had been scheduled to make the trip several months ago, but postponed the journey because there was warfare In progress at the time between India and Pakistan, whose air space the Israel plane must pass to reach the Nepalese capital of Katmandu. The visit is expected to broaden further the friendly rela- lations between Israel and Nepal.
TEL AVIV, (JTA) — The executive board of Tel Aviv University voted here not to accept the resignation of Dr. George Wise, who had quit the residency of the university, as well as to refuseJ;o^accept "aU
TKeiioarSs decision was Voted by a WllorofSbt to two, the dissenters being Dr. Ben-Zion Katz( rector of the univer¬ sity," and Prof. Alfred Klopstock, the former rector.
NEW YORK, (JTA) — The American"Jewish Congress called on Secretary of State Dean Rusfc-<o repudiate the "ugly practice" of excluding Jews from diplomatic posts in Arab countries, it was reported at a meeting of the organizations Governing Council.
tO,000 People Attend Funeral Of Rabbi Adler In Detroit
DETROIT, (JTA) — Led by highest clerical and lay digni¬ taries of the state and city, tacludtag Gov. George Romney, Mayor Jerome Cavanagh, and theh: official families, 20,000 persons at¬ tended funeral services for Rabbi Morris Adler, held at his own Shaarey Zedek Temple, in suburban Southfield on Sunday.
The rabbi, who would have been 60 on March 30, succumbed last Friday to d gunshot wound ta his head, received 27 days earlier, when a young, demented
congregant fired at him while the rabbi was conducting Sab¬ bath services in his pulpit. He was taken to Staal Hospital and had never regained conscious¬ ness. His wife, Mrs. Goldie Adler, was at his bedside when he died. His assailant, who had turned the giin on- hhnself, died from his self-inflicted bullet wound ta four days.
BOTH GOV. ROMNEY and
Mayor Cavanagh dedared Sun¬ day an official day of moumtag for the entire state and city. The rabbi's remains were laid out ta the temple Saturday night, and thousands of rfieUrners passed by the bier, throughout the night and all momtag.
The settees for Rabbi Adler were conducted by Dr. Louis
Chronicling The News
Editorial 2
Society 5, 6
Stopping Guide 8
Synagogues 8
I{eal Estate 13
Sports 9
Teen Scene 12
Tlie Jewish Center Orciiestra
'Jewish Musical FestivaV To Be Held Sunday At Center
A scene from the 1965 Jewish Music Festival under the Community-wide sponsorship of the Jewish Center demonstrates the variety of programming which is again planned for the cele¬ bration, of the Jewish Music Month, to be held on Sunday, March 20, at 3 p.m. ta the Center Auditorium.
Appeartag ta this musical project, will be: The Tlfereth Israel Choral Ensemble, under the direction of Saul Wachs and the Jewish Center Orchestra, led
by Richard Suddendorf.
FEATURED IN the after¬ noon's program, will be Lynn Nateman, who will dance to the background IsraeU Music "Ha Roeh Ha Katana;",Cynthia Rob¬ btas in a medley of Israeli Folk Songs, includtag "Al Harim" and "Arava;" and Richard Stein slng¬ tag.
Thrpugh the song, dance and concert, Jewish music will be ta¬ terpreted ta this variety of media.
THE TIFERETH ISRAEL
Choral Ensemble will sing "Ana Tavo," by Samuel Naumbourg and "Psahn 150," vrith music-by Louis Lewandowsky. Ihe chorus will also be heard ta two Israeli numbers, "Ozvie-Yal," arranged
by Shalom Altman and "Hava' neer-K'Dana Hora," arranged by Mr. Wachs.
The Jewish Center Orchestra will be heard ta Allan Hohvah- ness' "Sh'epard of Israel" and "Kol Nidre," by Anton Bmch. In the Hohvahness selection, Sanford Joseph will he heard as the Cantor; Phyllis Hlasten will be heard on piccolo; Samuel Buck on the flute and Herbert Urell on the trumpet.
IN THIS ANNUAL effort, dedicated to the contemporary expression of the Jewish Musical Arts, everyone is tavited to at¬ tend. The program presents a unique opportunity , to hear and enjoy this wide variety of music through the song, dance and con¬ cert.
Dr. Sachar To Speak At U.J.F.C. BaU
Dr. Howard.JHoFley..Sachsr*A distinguished American scholar, specializtag ta the histoiy Of the Jewish people and Israel, will speak on behalf of the United Jewish Fund and Council on Saturday eventag, April 2, at the Golden Gifts Ball at the Wtadtag Hollow Country Qub.
Dr. Sadiar Is presently a Pro¬ fessor of History at George Washington University. He was formerly the Acting Dh^etor of Brandeis University's Philip Lown Institute for Contemporary Jewish Studies as well as Direc¬ tor of Brandeis University's Jacob Hiatt Institute ta Israel, the first fully-accredited uni¬ versity program for training American imdergraduates in the structure of the contemporary Jewish state.
THREE OF HIS books; "The Course of Modem Jewish His¬ tory," "Aliyah, The People of Israel," and, most recently, "From the Ends of the Earth," have been enthusiastically re¬ ceived by critics and historians and have become standard texts wherever Jewish history is taught.
Dr. Sachar has carried out per¬ haps the most exhaustive study of Israel ever undertaken by an American. He has lived and worked with Israelis of all back¬ grounds. Dr. Sachar is on tati- mate terms with key leaders of the Israpl government His ob¬ servations have been recorded not only in his books on Jewish •and IsraeU history, but also to the lectures that he has delivered ta most of the important dties ta the United States.
MRS. LEON SCHOTTEN¬ STEIN, chairman, and Mrs. Sid¬ ney Blatt, co-chairman of tbe Golden Gifts BaU stated: "We are very fortunate to have Dr. Sachar as our guest at,_the annual Golden Gifts BallT His wealth of knowledge and Varied experiences should prove to be most unforgettable."
Invitations have been maUed this week for the Golden Gifts Ball. Ihe affair represents an individual minimum Advance Gifts contribution of $600 in the Men's Division. Anyone ta the community who has not received an invitation and would Uke to attend may contact the United Jewish Fund and Council office.
Finkelstein, chancellor of the Jewish Theological Semtaary of America; Rabbi Max Arzt, pro¬ vost of the seminary; Rabbi Ir- wta Goren, Rabbi Adler's associ¬ ate; Rabbi Mordechai Haipern, of Temple Beth Shalom, Detroit;! a cousta of Rabbi Adler; and' cantors Jacob H. Staenklar and Reuven Frankel. Interment was at Clover HUl Park, Royal Oak, Mich.
EVERY PEW In he 5,000-seat Shaarey Zedek Temple's sanc¬ tuary was flUed when the serv¬ ices were begun at 2 p.m. More than 1,000 other mourners lis¬ tened to the services over loud speakers ta other temple halls and study rooms. Thousands jammed the streets outside the $4,500,000 synagogue dedicated in 1962 under the supervision of Rabbi Adler, foUowing the serv¬ ices and reciting "amens" that came over other loud speakers.
600 AutomobUes FoUow Funeral
Procession to Cemetery
More than 500 automobiles fol¬ lowed the funeral procession from the temple to the ceme¬ tery. Among the national Jew¬ ish organizations represented at; the funeral were the CouncU of Jewish Federations and Welfare Funds, the Zionist Organization of America, the Jewish National Fund, and the Jewish War Vet¬ erans of the United States. The Israel Government was repre¬ sented by Consul Aviv Ekroni of the Consulate-General to Chi¬ cago, and the B'nai B'rith dele- gation was led by Label A. Katz, former national president of the organization.
In addition to official delega¬ tions representtog Jewish groups, there were also delegations rep¬ resenting Roman CathoUc and' Protestant churches. Archbishop Johh F. Deegan, Roman Catholic prelate of the Detroit diocese, lauded Rabbi Adler in his official mourning pronouncement. Lewis H. Wetosteta, president of the Council of Jewish Federations and Welfare Funds, caUed Rab¬ bi Adler "a giant ta his leader¬ ship ,of our people ahd our natioh."
T
Represented above are those participating in the Group Dynamics session as applied to the Telethon Workers of the 1966 UJFC Women's Division Campaign. Telethon will take place Sunday, March 20, 1966, frpm 10 a.m. to noon. Keep your Une open.
^Operation Tele-Giff Is Set For Sunday Morning
Mrs. Bemard K. Yenkto and Mrs. Samuel C. Gordon, co-chair¬ men of the "Tele^gift" campaign for the Women's Division, United Jewish Fund and CouncU, urge all women to keep their lines open on Sunday momtog, March 20, from 10 imtil noon to receive the aU important caU from the downtown offlce of Huntington National Bank — headquarters for the "Tele-gift" operations.
The purpose of the caUs io over 1200 women to Columbus and FrankUn County, wUl be to solicit their cooperation and ftaanclal assistance to the cause of the United Jewish Fund and CouncU.
THE FINANOIAL ORISIS
this year Is greater than to pre¬ vious years. In order to meet the situation each and every wtrnien Is asked to Increase her pledge over that of last year. "It is your extra gift that wiU help famiUes to critical areas, sudi as Poland, Rumania, Russia, and yes, even Cuba," stated Mrs. R. MUton Friedman, chahman of,the Wo¬ men's Division, at a recent meet¬ ing. "Our own local agencies, such as Heritage HoUse, the Jewi^ Center, Jewish FamUy
Service, and HUlel Foundation, receive assistance from the cam¬ paign, she said.
Home Is OK'd By The A.H.A.
Sol ZeU, president of Heritage . House (Columbus Jewish Home' For Aged) and Dr. Jack Silber- steto, chairman of the Medical Advisory Committee, announced that Heritage House has received the approval of the American Hospital Association as it has complied with the requirements for approval of Extended Care FaciUties.
Zell announced that this ap. proval tadicated that the stand¬ ards of medical and nurstag care at the home are. of the highest caliber. Also, it was noted that the many related programs such aa Occupational Therapy, Physi¬ cal Therapy Case Work, Group Work and the spiritual needs of the residents provide high stand¬ ards as well.
DR. SILBEBSTEIN stated that it is with a sense of pride that Heritage House is recog¬ nized by t{he American Hospital Association Committee for ap¬ proval as an Extendi Care
((••HMMd on pogo 4)

Vol. .44, No. 11
nW// Serving Columbus, Dayton/Ceiitraf and Southwestern Ohio \ir'''
! '' ' ii|i ¦ ¦ ¦ III I I
FRIDAY, MARCH 18, 1966 — 26 ADAR. 5726
"'*¦*'"" anil JaWlili Idaki
Javits Sees Danger In Middle East
BY TRVDE B. FELDBIAN
OhronloIe^s
Washington Correspondent.
Senator Jacob K. Javlts (R.N.Y.) delivered a major Sen¬ ate address oh policy In the Middle East and the dangers to world peace which are lurktog there.
He emphasized that Middle East might quickly become the next arena for a major con¬ frontation between the Soviet Union and the United States.
"OEBTAINLV, the tbne has now come to launch a major in¬ temational effort to consolidate the shaky Middle East peace and remove a possible source of ' conflict betvyeen the U. S. and the U. Si S. k. before, not after, an tatemational crisis erupts in this region," he said. "This effort must toclude two prtacipal ele¬ ments, and I strongly recommend their implementation by our Government." i
"An mjderstandtag must be reached with the Soviet Union on the de-escalation of the arms race in the Middle East, an anps race liot only tavolvtag the dis¬ pute between the Arab states and Israel, but also the many disputes among the Arab stated. To this end, I urge the Admtais¬ tration to tavite the Soviet Union to a Conference for the purpose of endtag shipments of arms and materials-of-war .Jtoutba,J4iddli East," he said.
"We must do all we can to promote an understandtag be¬ tween the Arab states and Israel. To this" end, 1 suggest that we use all diplomatic channels open to us to urge the conventag of a conference Of all nations of the Middle East and all other na¬ tions with vital interests ta this region in the quest for peace and to make i>ractical plans for the development of the enthe re- gion/^ J[flvita said.
The World's Weet
Compllad from^ JTA and WUP Reporh
900 BOWLERS TO VISIT COLUMBUS
Local B'nai B'rith bowlers opened the 25th Sectional Tour¬ nament at Piketon Lanes, rolling their singles, doubles and team events at Aiiios Lanes. Other sec¬ tionals are being held in, .Kansas - City, Los Angelas, Milwaukee, Rochester and Toledo.
This anhual event has grown over the years to the extent that 9dO bowlers arie expected to par¬ ticipate ta the Columbus touma' ment this weekend.
AWABDS WILL BE made for scratch and handicap scores, high gaitie and three-gamie seriw, and high ta all events. Ih addition a si«cial prize fund of $2760 has been set up to be awarded to bowlers ta addition tp sectional wtaners.
The special prize fund will be awarded to the highest team event score in all six sectionsi and they will be declared nation¬ al champions.
BOWUNO will begta prompt¬ ly at 6 pjTt on Saturday and at 10 a.m. on Sunday at Berwick,
(coiillnusd en page 41
TEL AVIV, (JTA) — Soviet Ambassador Dimltry Chu- vakhin proposed here the formation of a nuclear-free zone In the Middle East. Addressing the Israeli council of the World Jewish Congress, he said that a nuclear-free zone in the Middle East would lessen tensions in the region "and increase the chances for peace talks betwcfen the govern¬ ments of the area."
NEW YORK, (JTA) — A panel of eight distinguished Americans will conduct a public tribunal today at the Car¬ negie International Center to hear aeries of eyewitness reports on the condition of the Jews in the Soviet Union, it was announced here. At an all-day hearing, eight "jurors" will take testimony, receive reports and question witnesses in preparation for the issuance of a comprehensive report later this month. -
TEL AVIV, (JTA) — An American youth, Edward Levi, who ^crossed over into Syria two years ago, near Eln Gev, was returned to Israel in an exchange of prisoners between Israel and Syria. It was the first such exchange in two years
JERUSALEM, (JTA) — President and Mrs. Zalman Shazar left here by air for a week's state visit to Nepal. The President is returning the official visit paid to Israel last fall by King Mahendras. Mr. Shazar had been scheduled to make the trip several months ago, but postponed the journey because there was warfare In progress at the time between India and Pakistan, whose air space the Israel plane must pass to reach the Nepalese capital of Katmandu. The visit is expected to broaden further the friendly rela- lations between Israel and Nepal.
TEL AVIV, (JTA) — The executive board of Tel Aviv University voted here not to accept the resignation of Dr. George Wise, who had quit the residency of the university, as well as to refuseJ;o^accept "aU
TKeiioarSs decision was Voted by a WllorofSbt to two, the dissenters being Dr. Ben-Zion Katz( rector of the univer¬ sity," and Prof. Alfred Klopstock, the former rector.
NEW YORK, (JTA) — The American"Jewish Congress called on Secretary of State Dean Rusfc-